Rolston scores as Brodeur blanks Thrashers

ATLANTA (Ticker) -- The New Jersey Devils may not be scoring a
lot of goals, but Martin Brodeur is making sure they are getting
the right results.

Brodeur turned aside 25 shots en route to his 97th career
shutout and Brian Rolston netted a rare power-play goal to lead
the Devils to a 1-0 win over the Atlanta Thrashers on Thursday.

Dainius Zubrus and Brian Gionta notched assists for New Jersey,
which improved to 3-1-0 on the young season despite scoring just
six goals over that span.

"We are playing well so far this year," Zubrus said. "I think
tonight we gave up too many chances, but Marty played great."

The Devils have struggled on offense this season, but thanks to
their three-time Stanley Cup-winning future Hall of Fame
netminder, they have been on the right side of the scoresheet
more often than not.

The 36-year-old Brodeur once again kept another team at bay,
stopping eight shots in the first period, seven in the second
and 10 in the third to complete the shutout. He closed within
six of tying Hall of Famer Terry Sawchuk (103) for first place
on the all-time list.

"It's nice to have (a shutout) early in the season," Brodeur
said. "I feel good. It's all about winning.

"I just want to win games. Shutouts will come. It's hard to
predict shutouts. Luck has a lot to do with it."

It also was the 541st career win for the four-time Vezina Trophy
winner, who now trails Patrick Roy by 10 for the all-time mark.
But after the game, the modest Brodeur would rather talk about
the defense in front of him than his solid play.

"I think it's a combination of how we play defensively," he
said. "We're not getting outshot. We always outchance the
other team. Goals will come, we're not worried about that."

Atlanta defenseman Ron Hainsey had perhaps the best shot of the
night against the elite netminder, hitting the goalpost during a
man advantage in the third period. Besides that, it was another
smooth night in the crease for Brodeur, who has allowed five
goals in the club's first four games.

"We had about five good chances and he made some unbelievable
saves," Hainsey said. "That's why he's coming up on being the
best of all time."

"He was great," Atlanta goaltender Kari Lehtonen said. "We
couldn't solve him. We definitely had some good chances. He
was pretty good today."

Brodeur's strong play has masked the disastrous effort of the
Devils' power-play unit. New Jersey limped into Atlanta
misfiring on its last nine opportunities with the man advantage
and having converted just one of 11 chances overall.

After two more wasted opportunities, New Jersey finally broke
through behind a familiar face. And it was the law of averages
that finally helped the Devils, who unleashed 21 shots at
Lehtonen in the second period, break through.

"The difference tonight was our special teams," New Jersey coach
Brent Sutter said. "We killed off some big penalties and got
the power-play goal."

Blue-liner Garnet Exelby drew Atlanta's third penalty of the
night - a roughing infraction - with 2:42 left in an uneventful
second period for both clubs before Rolston snapped a scoreless
tie with his first tally of the season.

A former first-round pick of New Jersey in 1991, Rolston played
parts of his first six seasons with the franchise before
returning this offseason as a free agent.

Zubrus dished the puck to Rolston from along the right wing
boards, and the 35-year-old veteran made a strong move from
behind the net for a wraparound attempt. Although the shot
deflected off Lehtonen's right pad, Rolston stayed with the
play, knocking in the puck near the right post with 63 seconds
left in the middle period.

"I saw him jump in," Zubrus said. "I got Rolston the puck and
he took it to the net hard."

But the news was not all good for Rolston, who left the game in
the third period with a right ankle injury after crashing into
the boards.

"I think I just have a high ankle sprain at this point," said
Rolston, who was on crutches after the game. "I went (into the
boards) funny, that's all."